 
                 
            Riverside Park
Riverside Drive to Hudson River, West 59th Street to Clair Place, Manhattan, NY
Stretching four miles from 72nd to 158th streets along the Hudson River,  Riverside Park is widely regarded as Manhattan's most spectacular  waterfront park. As one of only eight officially designated scenic  landmarks in the City of New York, it has a long and storied history.
 
 Since 1875, the landscapes of Frederick Law Olmsted have offered escape  from the city and opportunities for people of all incomes to relax,  play, and socialize in tranquil settings. These landscapes contain rocky  precipices, sylvan lawns, and groves of mature elm trees. From  Riverside Drive, the land terraces down steeply in three levels to a  manmade shoreline and promenade, constructed between 1937 and 1941 under  the administration of Robert Moses. The designers, Gilmore D. Clarke  and Clinton Lloyd, added 134 acres to the park and twenty-two modern  recreational facilities. They wove through this extraordinary collection  of active recreation and scenic areas a vital north-south automobile  artery and a railroad running in a tunnel under the entire park.
 
 Recreational facilities include a range of sports courts and fields, a  skate park, a large portion of the Manhattan Waterfront Greenway (for  bicycles), and the 110-slip public marina at 79th street, an important  part of New York State's Water Trail.
 
	 
     
	 
	 
	 
	 
	